Rebecca Littleton Corbett '74, assistant managing editor/projects at The Baltimore Sun and the newest member of the Lovejoy Selection Committee, was introduced at the 2000 Lovejoy Convocation. She is the first Colby alumna and only the second Colby graduate to serve on the selection committee. The first, Dwight Sargent '39, helped to establish the award in 1952.

At Colby she was editor of The Colby Echo, and for several years after graduating she worked as an editor at the Waterville Morning Sentinel. She spent several years at The Journal Inquirer in Manchester, Conn., before joining The Baltimore Sun. A series she edited on salvage of ships won the 1998 Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting.

Corbett has conducted programs for The Poynter Institute, the American Press Institute, the University of Maryland and the Center for Foreign Journalists. She is a member of Investigative Reporters and Editors and served as a juror for the Pulitzer Prizes in 1997 and 1998.

Bill Kovach, a staunch defender of press freedom and a crusader for integrity in journalism, received the 48th Elijah Parish Lovejoy Award on November 9, the anniversary of the birth and the burial of Lovejoy, an 1826 Colby graduate who became America's first martyr to press freedom.

In this year's Lovejoy address, Kovach described a brave new world of communications where corporate conglomerates force their news divisions to put profits before the public interest and where media scramble to be the first to report news with insufficient regard for whether it's true.

"So we've come to this," he told about 200 people in Lorimer Chapel: "after struggling for centuries to remain free of government control and censorship, public interest journalism now finds itself struggling with similar pressures from private ownership. Independent journalism may in the end be dissolved in the solvent of commercial communication and synergistic self-promotion. The real meaning of the First Amendmentthat a free press means an independent pressis threatened for the first time in our history, even without government meddling."

Addressing the formal Lovejoy convocation just two days after the historic presidential election of November, with recounts just getting under way, Kovach was harshly critical of the media's election coverage. "I think election night was stunning in its uselessness to citizens," he said, criticizing the mentality that prompted television networks to call states, prematurely and sometimes incorrectly, for one candidate or another. "It was strictly driven by commercial pressure and not by journalism at all," he said.

"The idea that the purpose of the press is to tell you who's ahead and who's behind is a disservice to the process," he told a government class earlier in the day."

The Lovejoy Selection Committee unanimously chose Kovach for the 2000 Lovejoy Award earlier this year, and Kovach told those assembled for the November convocation, "There is no other award, including the Pulitzer Prize, that I would rather have than this one."

Kovach quit his first job as a reporter at the Johnson City (Tennessee) Press-Chronicle because the publisher wouldn't let him cover civil rights in the early 1960s. He quit his last newspaper job, as editor of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, when his principles clashed with the publisher's business interests. In between he had a remarkable career, at the Tennessean,TheNew York Times and The Washington Post.

Working in the Times's Boston bureau he helped photocopy the Pentagon papers and paid for the copies with a personal check. In Nashville he refused to leave the senate chamber when ordered, and an ensuing court case led to the nation's sunshine laws that require decisions to be made in public. In Washington he worked on the story about Wilbur Mills driving drunk with a stripper into the Tidal Basin, a story that broke the Times's policy of ignoring stories about the private lives of public figures.

After leaving daily journalism, Kovach led The Nieman Foundation at Harvard University, which strives to elevate journalism standards through publications, seminars, conferences and fellowships. After 11 years at Harvard he retired last year to chairthe Committee of Concerned Journalists, whose mission is to uphold the best practices of journalism. He served for 12 years, from 1988 to 1999, on Colby's Lovejoy Selection Committee.

Bill Kovach, Lovejoy recipient, delivers the Lovejoy Address.

The selection committee that chose Kovach for this year's award includes Boston Globe editor Matthew Storin, Chicago Tribune executive editor Ann Marie Lipinski, Portland Oregonian executive editor (retired) William Hilliard and Dallas Morning News editorial page editor Rena Pederson. The presidential election crisis, which was in its second day when the Lovejoy Convocation was held in November, prevented members of the selection committee from attending the convocation, but President William Adams quoted Lipinski, who said when Kovach was chosen for the award, "If there's any living, breathing individual alive today who embodies the ideals of the Lovejoy Award, it's Bill Kovach."

Colby established the Lovejoy Award in 1952 for an editor, reporter or publisher who has contributed to the nation's journalistic achievement. Lovejoy was martyred on November 7, 1837, when he was killed defending his abolitionist newspaper from a pro-slavery mob.